110.) | Triduan Newspaper.—Stereotype Printings 
mean time, the sick chicks will some- 
times eat voracivusly, until they die; and 
if they survive, they remain lean-and vo- 
_Facious throughout the season, showing 
probably no sign of thrift, until Jate ia 
autumn; of course most costly. Judg- 
ment of selection must be exercised. in 
the case. A brood of young chicks, for 
the first two or three weeks, may be most 
beautiful in plumage; on a sudden, many 
ef them will be metamorphosed into the 
most haggard, rufiled, and dirty devils 
‘imaginable. Dissected some which 
died, 
ing. Some marks of inflammation. 
Livers unsound, and a spot denoting the 
approaching adhesion of the lungs to the 
pleura. Chickens in plenty may be ob- 
tained, either in the usual and natural 
mode of hatching, or by artificial heat, 
which L have formerly practised; the 
great difficulty lies in rearing them, and 
this is much enhanced upon cold and 
wet clayey soils. In dry, sandy, and cal- 
¢areous districts, they know little of dis- 
€asé among their poultry; and in all 
parts, where successful breeding is me- 
ditated, sufficient. room and exercise for 
pecking about, as well as shelter, is of 
the first consequence. 
My brother farmer of Middlesex will, 
I hope, derive some satisfaction from 
what I have written, and my treating the 
subject so much at large, will, I trust, be 
excused, on the consideration that I 
have been requested so to do by friends, 
at various periods. Your correspondent, 
Mr. Editor, will not wonder that he has 
found the usual.remedies fail, norexpect 
that a mere form of words, with the 
formal compound, its sequel should have 
@ magical effect in the cure of disease. 
The practice of medicine is not quite so 
fasy. F du, 
Middleser, October 16. | 
P.S.—I wish to make the amende honorable 
in time, or rather to take time by the‘fore- 
tock. A perusal of part-of Walter Scoti’s 
beautiful poem, the Lady of the Lake, has in- 
_ duced me to Suspect myself in error, in my 
date criticism on the pronunciation of Do- 
) naldbane, in the tragedy of Macbeth. I res 
guest’ information on that point, ‘anticipating 
with how great truth it may be said, that I 
.am a far abler critic on ‘Boultry. than on the, 
“Scotish language and antiquities. 
Ao the Editor of ihe Monthly Magazine, 
} SUR, \ . 
MONG the numerous papers which 
. issue from the metropolitan press, 
‘is rather remarkable that there should 
no oné published twice a. week, 
\ 
“horance of the passing events, 
these circumstances, I am inclined to’ 
Crops full and obstructed, scour-. 
bea 
va 
40? 
Phe diurnal prints, are too expensive 
for every individual, and in conse) 
quence the weekly ones have been estas 
blished; but these of necessity give 
a very abstracted account of the various 
eccurrences of the preceding seven-days, 
and are often objected to on the ground 
of the subscriber being kept so long in igs 
From 
think, that any person having it in con. 
templation to establish a newspaver, or 
any proprietor of an existing weckly 
print, inclined to extend his plan, would 
fod it advantageous to introduce sucha 
paper as that f have alluded to, (and at 
a 5 : Pe. 
the price of six-pence) which would 
scarcely tail of meeting a friendly res 
ception from a public, ever ready to 
support new and useful arrangements. 
| . Inpex, 
— 
Lo the Editor of the Monthly Magazines. 
}o WISERY . 
OUR correspondent I. A. appears 
4i. from the question he asks, to ba 
totally unacquainted with any part of the 
process of stereotype printing, since he 
“wishes to know whether it is possible for 
SO many errors which he has discovered 
in Oddy’s edition of Hume and Smollett’s. 
History of England, to be committed 1 
od 
the stereotype? I answer, Fes, Bos) 
stereotype plates are cast from pageseset 
up with moveable types ; of course they 
are fac-similes of them: therefore, if 
those pages are not carefully corrected 
before an impression of them is taken in 
the plaster (in order for casting), the 
Same errors will always appear in the 
stereotype ‘plates, as are in the pages af 
the moveable type. Perhaps’ your cors 
respondent’s remarks may be timely 
taken up by Mr. Oddy, for him to be 
more careful in future in his corrections, 
_ So that bis publication may yet approxi« 
mate rather nearer to the point which 
he has promised: namely, “ that it shall 
beautiful and correct stereotype 
edition.’ M-QuaDRaT, _ 
B m, Oct. 15,1810. 
+ RRR e 
Lothe Editor of the Monthly Magazine} 
ste, 
@ ONEE months aso I submitted to the 
kK public, through the channel of your 
valuavle Magazine, an outline ofa poem 
on the Delyce, 
which L have. been col4 
legting materials for, and arranging, these 
six years past; and now wish, through the 
Same medium, to obtain the opinion of ‘ 
goine of yourexperienced correspondents, 
: respecting 
